DeSantis: 'There's a Huge Amount of Problems' with 'Brandon in the White House'
'He’s not had a very good year'

Florida's Republican Governor Ron DeSantis has blasted Joe Biden, saying the United States is facing a lot of problems with “Brandon” in office.
“All the problems you see with our country, and there’s a huge amount of problems with Brandon in the White House,” DeSantis said.
“I mean, look, the guy is not clicking on all cylinders, he’s not had a very good year,” he added.
“We’re still strong in the state of Florida. We’re beating Brandon in Florida."
“When I got elected, there were about 300,000 more registered Democrats in Florida than Republicans,” he said.
“Well now, for the first time in history, we have more Republicans than Democrats, and we’re gaining more and more every single month."

“Brandon” came from the popular anti-Biden slogan “Let’s Go, Brandon,” which started last year after NBC Sports reporter Kelli Stavas attempted to do damage control when the crowd was chanting “F*ck Joe Biden” at the NASCAR race at the Talladega Superspeedway in Alabama.
Stavast claimed that they were chanting, “Let’s go, Brandon.”
The slogan is now chanted across stadiums as a code for “F*** Joe Biden.”
Biden’s approval rating has collapsed to 33%, which also saw a low 28% approval rating from Hispanics, according to polling released this week by Quinnipiac University.
70% of Americans said that the economy was not in good shape, the poll also found.

“In the two months since signing the $1 trillion infrastructure bill into law, President Biden has by almost every measure bombed big time on the things that matter most,” Axios reported.
“It’s rare for a president to be at odds with Republicans, moderate Democrats, and liberal Democrats — all at once.
"But that’s where Biden finds himself at the start of an election year that many Democrats believe will result in the loss of the House and maybe the Senate.”
Besides Biden’s low approval rating, there is also anger from far-left activists, skyrocketing inflation, supply chain issues, and disastrous foreign policy decisions.
Former Treasury Secretary under former President Bill Clinton warned that inflation is becoming an “entrenched” problem.
“I think the data flow is saying what I’ve thought for quite some time that, yes, there are transitory elements in inflation, and very likely they will recede, but we are basically moving towards higher entrenched inflation,” Summers said.
“It’s there in expectations; it’s there in wages, it’s there in labor shortages, it’s there in the pervasive pattern across many different prices.”
“We have a massive, overheated labor market,” Summers continued.
“We have the highest ratio of vacancies to unemployment in the country’s history, by a large margin. We have shortages of labor, in everything from psychotherapy, to McDonald's, in everything from investment analysts to gardeners, that suggests a surfeit of purchasing power and demand relative to the capacity of the economy to produce, and unless we bring those things into balance, we’re going to have not just higher inflation, but possibly even accelerating inflation.”
“And we need to recognize that we have an overheated economy that we are going to need to cool off.”